With the amount of media news coverage of Apple's iPad tablet computer product let's discuss Star Trek and the use of hand-held computers.
First there was the Tricorder in TOS, then the medical tri-corder in VOY.
In VOY they had bulky but pretty obvious tablet computers that looked about the size of an iPad's (9.7-inch screen) Weight: 1.6 pounds (0.73 kg).
ENT had a slimmer handheld tablet device where in season 3 T'Pol breaks it on Archer's desk in Damage.
That looked a lot like a iPad.
Considering "Damage" aired in April 2004 were many people really predicting that the tablet computer genre was the way of the future?
What about the Trek feature films and tablet computers?
In March 2001 the New York Times talked about
In the May 2004 issue of Popular Science there was a technology of the future article that mentioned the next device would be a
First there was the Tricorder in TOS, then the medical tri-corder in VOY.
In VOY they had bulky but pretty obvious tablet computers that looked about the size of an iPad's (9.7-inch screen) Weight: 1.6 pounds (0.73 kg).
ENT had a slimmer handheld tablet device where in season 3 T'Pol breaks it on Archer's desk in Damage.
That looked a lot like a iPad.
Considering "Damage" aired in April 2004 were many people really predicting that the tablet computer genre was the way of the future?
What about the Trek feature films and tablet computers?
In March 2001 the New York Times talked about
MICROSOFT, COMPAQ AND OTHERS TO WORK ON TABLET PC a tablet-sized, wireless personal computer. The computers will be about the size of a piece of notebook paper
Heavy bulky tablets have been available for a few years which are basically laptops where the touch-sensitive screen is flipped over."Our aspiration is that in three to five years, input with pen or with speech will be as ubiquitous as a keyboard and mouse are today."
In the May 2004 issue of Popular Science there was a technology of the future article that mentioned the next device would be a
Is the Apple iPad (and the inevitable copycats that will be released in the next 18 months) really going to be closer to Star Trek and how people read all sorts of things? Is this where the electronic form of a book really becomes mainstream and more popular than the paper print edition? (Even without a dedicated proprietary E-Book reader hardware unit?)"smart communicator"
will have memory and processing power of today's best desktop computers, and it'll display on any nearby screen.
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